. The sunbonnet babies in Holland; a second reader . The Queen and Good-by. THE QUEEN AND GOOD-BY Good-by, grandfather! Good-by, grand-mother! Good-by, dear old Edam farm! Molly and May waved their handkerchiefsvery hard, except when they had to use themto wipe the tears away. They were really going home at father and mother were going, too. UncleDirk was taking them in his barge as far as thecity of Amsterdam. Then they would hurry bytrain to the big ocean steamer, and then— But the Sunbonnet Babies were not quite surethey were ready to leave the canals, the wind-mills, and the dea
. The sunbonnet babies in Holland; a second reader . The Queen and Good-by. THE QUEEN AND GOOD-BY Good-by, grandfather! Good-by, grand-mother! Good-by, dear old Edam farm! Molly and May waved their handkerchiefsvery hard, except when they had to use themto wipe the tears away. They were really going home at father and mother were going, too. UncleDirk was taking them in his barge as far as thecity of Amsterdam. Then they would hurry bytrain to the big ocean steamer, and then— But the Sunbonnet Babies were not quite surethey were ready to leave the canals, the wind-mills, and the dear Dutch friends in thought that the Holland flag, with itsbroad stripes of red, white, and blue, was almostas handsome as their own stars and stripes, butnot quite. And so they were going home. 136 THE QUEEN AND GOOD-BY 137 It did not take long for the wind and thebig brown sail to pull the barge from Edam toAmsterdam. As they sailed up the busy river into thecity they were sure that something quite unusualwas happening. It seemed as if all the churchbells
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidsunbonnetbab, bookyear1915